Esteemed economists and writers, Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner, wrote the book Freakonomics to delve into the inner workings of economics. Freakonomics discloses the unpredictable effects of incentives beneath ordinary situations. Levitt and Dubner sail on an informal tone by asking questions and breaking up their writing, in order to maintain a witty connection with the audience.…
READ: Naked Economics: Undressing the Dismal Science, Charles Wheeland, W.W. Norton, 2003. Completely- cover to cover.…
In Freakonomics, Stephen D Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner’s purpose was to make the reader susceptible to the idea that there is a concealed yet obvious side of everything, if delved into enough. This purpose is useful in uncovering the conventional wisdom, a phrase coined by economist John Kenneth Galbraith. According to him, he believed that conventional wisdom “ must be simple, convenient, comfortable, and comforting - though not necessarily true”(Levitt and Dubner 86). But, what if someone wanted to know if some conventional wisdom is true? Therefore, delving into the hidden sides of conventional wisdom is necessary, which is exemplified with the peculiar issue drug dealers living with their moms and becoming rich.…
Economics is defined as the study of financial trends. Freakonomics by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner examines the hidden side of everyday events that Levitt has studied throughout his career. Levitt has found that unconventional ways of collecting data and measuring data are occasionally the correct way to put the world in terms that we can all understand.…
Freakonomics, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, is book that not your typical economist would write it was co-authored in 2005 and if morality represents how we would like the world to work, then economics represent how it actually does work in this award-winning book. Steven D. Levitt is a not your typical economist. He is a much-heralded scholar who studies the riddles of everyday life- from cheating and crime to sports and child rearing and whose conclusions turn the conventional wisdom on its head (freakonomics.com). Stephen J. Dubner is an award-winning author and journalist (freakonomics.com). These two authors team up to create a very insightful groundbreaking collaboration. They set out to to explore…
Before I start this paper I should first off tell you what economics is. Economics is the study of incentives-how people get what they want, or need. In the early 1990s crime was everywhere in the…
In the book, Gang Leader for a Day by Sudhir Venkatesh, a sociology student from the University of Chicago starts out simply trying to understand “how it feels to be poor and black,” and ends up spending years and years figuring out the ins and outs of a gang society (Venkatesh 14). Sudhir receives the chance of a sociologist’s lifetime to see first-hand what life is like in the projects. He follows gang leader, J.T. around and studies his life at the Robert Taylor homes for years. Throughout Venkatesh’s experience he witnesses many things some people go a lifetime without seeing. For example, he was no stranger to seeing people use drugs or get beat up by gang members. One interesting aspect of Venkatesh’s experiment is the community aspect of the gang life. Although it was hard for Venkatesh to understand during his adventure, even the gang had a sense of what it was like to help out their community and how important it was. There were a lot of aspects of the book that showed the sociological perspective of the Robert Taylor community. The book Gang Leader for a Day shows the sociological perspective by bringing Robert Merton’s structural strain theory to life.…
In the novel Freakonomics, Levit and Dubner try to take a unique approach to analyzing reasons behind why things occur in our society. Essentially, “What this book is about is stripping a layer or two from the surface of modern life and seeing what is happening underneath.” (10) A perfect example of this is how they discovered that the legalization of abortion was the cause of crime dropping to its lowest level in thirty-five years. While most expert economists simply attributed the drop to the wellness of the economy, the increase in gun control laws and the new policing strategies, Levit and Dubner searched for other possibilities where no one else thought to look. That is when they realized that approximately twenty years before the drastic drop in crime, abortion was legalized. Studies have shown that “… a child born into an adverse family environment is far more likely than other children to become a criminal.” (4) Thus, this theory was proven further by the fact that around the time when these children would have begun committing crimes, there was significantly less crime.…
Sometimes the best way to take off a band aid isn’t to rip it off quickly. Such a rigid shock can cause excessive discomfort. He argues that crime has dropped in that past 20 years because of the legalization of abortion. Abortion is an extremely sensitive topic and debating it, in the USA, has essentially become taboo. Families that tend to practice abortion, using that phrase loosely, are more likely to raise children that become criminals. They aren’t able to raise the children well in their economic struggle.…
“... often a small and simple question can help chisel away at the biggest problems.” (Levitt and Dubner 45). Freakonomics demonstrates that you can understand what drives people to act the way they do, why we chose to side with conventional wisdom when it is often times wrong, and how the smallest of actions can have consequences that alter the world as we know it. Through excerpts of unsystematic data and studies, Levitt and Dubner show through questioning, digging deeper, and looking beyond conventional thought, that two opposite things may not be so different. They investigate three major cogs in the machine that is the world: incentives, subtle causation of major effects, and failures of conventional wisdom (12). They enforce that incentives drive most everything that we do, no matter who we are. Incentives can range from obvious, like getting good scores on standardized tests, to the seemingly unreachable, unfathomable ones, like becoming a successful drug lord. Incentives lay the groundwork of our lives, and understanding them is key.…
Freakonomics, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, is an explanatory book that seeks to show the reader the truth behind economics through tying economic themes to pop culture ones. The almost guide-like book takes the reader on a trip that explains why people do the things they do and how it all relates, making comical connections like Sumo wrestlers to teachers. I found the book to be a delightfully enlightening piece of literature that taught me the ploys and tactics of the business world, like how real estate agents swindle their buyers, while keeping me interested through many short anecdotes that take away the bore of a typical, formulaic economics book. Over all, the book’s general casual tone and its ability to make serious matters easy to read and enjoy made the book a good read.…
There are several reasons why gang members pose a special challenge to parole and probation officers supervision in the community. One of the reasons is gang members are master predators of the urban landscape and can become a repeat offender. Their ability to instill fear into people of a community knows no bounds. Gangs have spread through our country like a plague and now exist in rural, suburban and inner cities. The strategies for dealing with the gang problem are suppression, intervention, and prevention. One of the strategies of supervising is creating a demographic of gang members such as activities and any tattoos in relation to a gang group. Since gangs have a strong appeal for many children who live in communities where gangs thrive.…
O'Banion was born to Irish Catholic parents in Aurora, Illinois and spent his early boyhood in the small town of Maroa in Central Illinois. In 1901, after his mother's death, he moved to Chicago with his father and one of his brothers (a second brother, Frank, remained in Maroa). The family settled in Kilgubbin, otherwise know as "Little Hell," a heavily Irish area on the North Side of Chicago that was notorious citywide for its crime. Years later, Kilgubbin became the site of the infamous Cabrini-Green public housing project.…
Two alleged Mafia members in the Gambino crime family pled guilty to charges that they used the Internet to defraud…
Criminal justice agencies use a variety of strategies to combat gang-related crime. www.nig.gov states that its starts with prevention; Prevention refers to services, programs or activities designed to prevent people from joining gangs. Prevention often focuses on young persons. Situational gang crime prevention focuses more on the situational causes of crime and less on the dispositional traits of specific offenders and often addresses the environmental and opportunistic factors that influence offender decision-making, next is Intervention, it seeks to draw gang members and close associates away from the gang lifestyle.…